Knights of the Round Table

Alexandra Lynn Todak and Julia A. King

Consumerism has been a fact of American life since the 18thcentury, when English merchants figured out that the colonists would pay high prices for clothing, furnishings, and even tea – goods that made the colonists feel like Englishmen and not like provincials in some far-flung empire. Industrialization in the 19th century provided even more goods for consumers, but it was only in the mid-20thcentury, after the end of World War II, that consumer goods became widely and easily available to all Americans. In particular, automobiles, television sets, and even houses were suddenly affordable, available, and within relatively easy reach of most people.

For the men and women flooding St. Mary’s County for jobs related to the Patuxent River Naval Air Station, the place must have seemed like a colony in some far-flung empire. Harold Herndon, who came to St. Mary’s in 1960 to interview for a teaching position with the Board of Education, remembers that he “couldn’t find the place on a map. It took forever to get down here and I was trying to figure out, what in the world have I gotten myself into?” All these new souls would need those goods and services increasingly expected in post-World War II America, goods and services that signified one’s status as an American.

As Lord Baltimore had discovered in the 17th century, so these new arrivals were discovering in the mid-20th, there was opportunity – and lots of it – right here in St. Mary’s County. Lexington Park became the center of the new boom town and the new consumerism.

They call it the Round Table. It’s a circular table in the front of Linda’s Café in Lexington Park and it’s positioned close enough to call to the waitresses behind the lunch counter and close enough for the waitresses to eavesdrop on the Round Table conversations. Two or three times a day, eight men used to come into Linda’s and let their aging bodies, bones, and stories collapse into the chairs. “If I could be a fly on the wall,” Linda’s Café owner Linda Palchinsky comments, “and just listen to those men talk, I would be so educated. They have so much history.” These eight men ordered Linda’s eggs and coffee, but mostly they came for the atmosphere. And like the rest of Linda’s loyal customers, they relished the feeling of community.

Today, only three knights remain at the Round Table. Loyal patrons have watched the knights over the years. They’ve seen these men, whose stories hang in the air for others to take in along with their eggs and toast, age and fade away one by one.

This year, two blocks away from Linda’s Café, the Roost Restaurant closed its doors for the last time. This popular landmark had celebrated the development of the county and the achievements of the Patuxent River Naval Air Station for just over half a century. “Before there was Applebee’s, there was the Roost,” says Bill Harris, the Roost’s last owner. “Anybody who was anyone, families, everyone would go to the Roost.”

Indeed, before there was the Roost, which first opened in 1947, there were almost no restaurants in St. Mary’s County. Tobacco, corn, and wheat dominated the landscape. If you wanted a snack or a light meal, your best bet was to frequent one of the many general stores along the county’s highways. For a more formal meal, you’d have to travel to one of the old wooden hotels along the shoreline, such as Point Lookout Hotel, Tolson’s Hotel at Piney Point, or Point Manor at Cedar Point.

With the construction of the Patuxent River Naval Air Station in 1942, however, and its ongoing expansion, newcomers began invading the hills of tobacco and the rows of corn. By the 1960s and ‘70s, the military had come to define this part of the county. They named it, too: Lexington Park, for the World War II aircraft carrier by that name.

Many Navy families stayed put when their tours of duty ended, choosing to open businesses in Lexington Park. They sensed that these grounds were fertile for a different sort of economy. Newcomers like Jack Daugherty and Jack Rue, the first owner of the Roost, invested themselves in their businesses and laid the foundations of a new community. Such men sat at the Round Table.

Jack Daugherty bought and sold land and owned a sports store, as well as the “Merchandise Mart,” an Esso gas station, a radio station, and a bank. He built the first Roost Restaurant for his friend, Jack Rue, in the spot where Raley’s Furniture now stands on Great Mills Road. You can still make out the old window frames on the side of the furniture store. J. Frank Raley, a young native countian with an entrepreneurial spirit, opened an insurance company in the boiler room behind Daugherty’s gas station. Bob Gabrelcik and Tommy Waring started the water company. Jack Gelrud opened the Park Rexall Pharmacy in a building that still stands in what was once known as the “mixing bowl”. With its original glass-and-brick-columned front intact, it now houses medical suites.

“We knew this town was gonna go,” Daugherty explained in 1997. The land promised economic profit, and these men committed their fortunes to that land. Eagerness was mortared into foundations; the future coated the walls in fresh paint; the American Dream reflected itself in window panes. Storeowners would walk out and greet customers, proudly show them around their stores, and call them when new shipments arrived. A line of stores started about where Linda’s Café is today and ran along Great Mills Road on down into Millison Plaza. On Saturdays, this district was so busy that someone had to direct traffic.

The businesses that multiplied in Lexington Park as the base expanded were built on undeveloped land. “Remember now,” businessman Larry Millison once remarked, “all of Lexington Park was woods. It’s hard for people to understand this, but it was all woods.” Land was cheap – many people were convinced the base would eventually leave – and those people here wanted things Americans elsewhere were coming to take for granted. Those ‘things’ included cars, TV sets, and other consumer goods. The base generated a boom the likes of which no one had seen since Lord Baltimore put ashore in 1634.

“There was a couple by the name of Camel—Effie and Harry Camel,” Millison continued. “Harry, I can remember, was making fifty cents a day when the base came here. He was making, like, 180 dollars a week six months later … There was no way Harry Camel could have gotten enough money to get a car if the base hadn’t come.”

Jack Daugherty, who sold televisions at his sports store, tells a story where a television set became part of the price he had to pay for a piece of land in Lexington Park. “The piece of property where the Anchor Van Lines [is now on Route 235] was owned by a fellow named Stubbs. Stubbs comes to me, he says, ‘Mr. Daugherty, I’ll sell that property.’ I said, ‘What do you want for it?’ He says, ‘I want $2,000 and a combination television set.’ I said, ‘Okay, I can get that for you.’ Took the television down to his house. He didn’t even have electricity [laughs]. Stubbs [said], ‘Just sit it in the middle of the floor’ [laughing].”

Now we’ve lost the Roost, the heart of old Lexington Park. Linda’s Café is struggling. The Hub, Park Rexall Pharmacy, Dietz Shoe Store, the Joy Shop, and other stores of those early days are now only memories. Jack Gelrud lamented the loss of the once close-knit feel of the community. “About 50 percent of the people from St. Mary’s probably came to Rexall. I got to know everyone by name,” he says. “You couldn’t walk into any business and not know someone. Today, I can walk into any business and the chances are I don’t know anyone. That’s the change.

Larry Millison remembered the boom times fondly. “It’s a delight to still see those people, those that are living today,” Millison recalled in 1987. “Not many of ‘em left. And it reminds me of a country song called, ‘I Got Fortunes in Memories.’ And that would be my recollections of the base and what happened in Lexington Park in those days. It’s a fortune in memories. I would love to live it again, and I wouldn’t have traded it for anything in the world.”

Lewie Aldridge, Sr., who took over the Ford dealership on Great Mills Road in 1960, also remembered the county’s commercial past, which included slots, other forms of gambling, and bars. “Slot machines and gambling made a lot of money,” Aldridge said, repeating with emphasis, “A LOT OF MONEY.” Tom Daugherty, Jack’s son, who grew up in the ’50s and ’60s in Lexington Park, recalls that gambling “was everywhere, it was great. I grew up learning how to jimmy a slot and beat a pin ball machine. It was a lot of fun. You knew you never played them legitimately, the kids that grew up with them, because they beat you every time. We learned how to jimmy ‘em and how to put slugs in ‘em and put mercury on an old English penny and flip it in the 50-cent machine and it worked like a charm. The only places that didn’t have slot machines were doctor’s offices, the dentist office, and churches. They had them in the Safeway, the A&P, the drug stores, the gas stations, you name it, they had ‘em there.”

Along with slots were the bars. “Oh man,” Aldridge recalled, “they thought more about building bars than they did the homes! They built them everywhere. We had so many bars. Every place you went into was a bar. Folks did more drinking then they did eating. Everybody!” Tom Daugherty jokes that, at his birth, he “had the unfortunate habit of coming right when happy hour was beginning, around 4:00, and all the doctors wanted to head over to the BOQ [Bachelor’s Officers Quarters] and start drinking, and so Nurse Kelly brought me into the world.” Tom also recalls that there were a lot of clubs: “we had one called The Dock, one called The Piccolo, Honey Lane, Midway Bar, and you know, they were interesting clubs [chuckles]. Let’s see, Rose’s was probably started in the early ’70s; Rosie’s used to be over next to a place called Pete’s Galley, which is not there anymore but it was right across the alley from Raley’s Furniture.”

Few people reminisce fondly about slots or bars. “It was very sad,” Tom Daugherty recalls about slot machine gambling, for someone affiliated with the base to “get a paycheck and come out and blow it in a slot machine or a pinball machine. The Navy Relief would have to go and help the person make it to the next pay period, so yes, gambling had a very negative effect. And it also had a negative effect on attracting quality businesses.”

And no one reminisces fondly about the Jim Crow laws that, at least before the mid- to late 60s, were in force in Southern Maryland. Fred Talbert, who moved to the county in the ’40s, remembered going to business owners in Lexington Park and Leonardtown, asking them if they would be willing to serve African Americans alongside white customers at their lunch counters. One merchant promised he would, and he did; but he warned Talbert that his counter girl might not. Another merchant said he would serve blacks, but that they had “better not steal anything” because he would call “a lawyer.” Eventually the merchant closed the lunch counter.

Nostalgia—the senses of loss and longing we have for a past that often never was—can be a debilitating drug. St. Mary’s County in the mid-20thcentury has generated a storehouse of memories, some more happy than others. All of these memories are precious, and all of them are part of that grand narrative we know as the American Dream.

Alexandra Todak graduated from St. Mary's College in 2011, majoring in English and French.

Multimedia

Jack Rue recalls founding Rue's Roost with Jack Daugherty.

Jack Daugherty remembers property acquisition during the boomtown years in Lexington Park.

Tom Daugherty tells how slots ruled St. Mary's County--and how he got around them!